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Page "Kodava language" ¶ 12
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Ethnologue and report
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Ethnologue: Languages of the World is a web and print publication containing statistics for 6, 909 languages in the 16th edition, released in 2009.
In 2002 the Ethnologue was asked to work with the International Organization for Standardization ( ISO ) to integrate its codes into a draft international standard.
In addition to choosing a primary name for the language, Ethnologue also gives some of the names by which a language is called by its speakers, by the government, by foreigners and by neighbors, as well as how it has been named and referenced historically, regardless of which designation is considered official, politically correct or offensive or by whom.
William Bright, then editor of Language: Journal of the Linguistic Society of America, wrote of Ethnologue that it " is indispensable for any reference shelf on the languages of the world.
Of the twenty languages with the largest numbers of native speakers according to SIL Ethnologue, twelve are Indo-European: Spanish, English, Hindi, Portuguese, Bengali, Russian, German, Marathi, French, Italian, Punjabi, and Urdu, accounting for over 1. 7 billion native speakers.
* Ethnologue entry for Hlai language
The total for all Nilo-Saharan languages in Ethnologue 16 is 38 39 million.
* Ethnologue. com, Ethnologue entry for Algonquian languages
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Combining the Ethnologue figures with strong population growth in Nepal, the assumption of 20 million people with Nepali as their mother tongue is a reasonable estimate for 2006.
Ethnologue lists 25 languages for Bhutan.
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Ethnologue and
The number of Rashad languages, also called Tegali Tagoi, varies among descriptions, from two ( Williamson & Blench 2000 ), three ( Ethnologue ), to eight ( Blench ms ).
According to Ethnologue, there are " 200 2, 000 " who speak Esperanto as a first language.
Ethnologue lists 92 languages in this family, with 76 of these languages being in the Kam Tai branch.
The Ethnologue excludes Ghadamès and Nafusi from Eastern Berber, and subgroups Sokna with Awjila in an " Awjila Sokna group " rather than with Siwa.
Ethnologue places Siwi in an Eastern Berber group with the Awjila Sokna languages of central and eastern Libya.
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The Benue Congo group of languages constitutes the largest branch of the Niger Congo language family, both in terms of sheer number of languages, of which Ethnologue ( 2009 ) counts 900, and in terms of speakers, numbering perhaps 350 million.
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However, he does not include Alada or Toli ( Tɔli ) as part of Gun, as classified by Ethnologue, but as Phla Pherá languages.
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In Ethnologue 16, the Mzab Wargla languages are listed as:
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It belongs in the Jukunoid family of Niger Congo, according to the Vienna Yukuben Project and the Ethnologue ( 15th ed.
According to the Vienna Yukuben Project, it and Bete probably belong together in the Southern Jukunoid branch of Niger Congo ; Ethnologue notes this but leaves it unclassified.
The Ethnologue gives its family as " unclassified ", an apparent error, as it notes that Yauma is " part of the Ngangela subgroup " of the Chokwe Luchazi ( K. 10 ) Bantu languages.
While the Ethnologue lists it as unclassified, it appears to be a Bongo Bagirmi language within the Central Sudanic family ( Lionel Bender, Pascal Boyeldieu ); Roger Blench classifies " Fer " as Bagirmi, but " Kara of Birao " as one of the related Kara languages.
Due to the uncertainty about the internal structure of the eastern Gbe major grouping, the Ethnologue has omitted Phla Pherá altogether from its subclassification of Gbe languages.
# Interestingly, failure to recognize Hwla as a spelling variant seems to have caused the listing of this Phla Pherá language as ' unclassified ' on the Ethnologue, as was pointed out by Angela Kluge ( 2000: 104 ); this was rectified in the 15th edition.

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